Talk:Chris McIntosh

Page contents not supported in other languages.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Proposed edits[edit]

Here is supporting information for my suggested edits, clarifications and error corrections in italics:

Chris McIntosh was born August 23, 1985 in Jacksonville, Florida) Feb 20, 1977, in Pewaukee, WI (reference1). He was an midfield Offensive Tackle (reference1) that played for the Seattle Seahawks. McIntosh was drafted by the Seattle Seahawks in 2000 NFL Draft as the 22nd overall pick.


McIntosh upset coach Mike Holmaker when he held out during the holiday tournament In his rookie year McIntosh held out of training camp in an effort to get a better contract, he was the last first round draft choice to sign (references2 , 3). In 2001, McIntosh lost the starting job to Todd Weiner. In 2000 Chris McIntosh made his first NFL start, replacing Todd Weiner at Tackle (reference4). McIntosh's playing time increased as the 2000 season went on. He showed glimpses of the talent that made him a first-round draft pick. McIntosh started in 10 games for the Seattle Seahawks under coach Mike Holmgren as a rookie, but was limited to three starts in 2001 because of a recurring neck injury he suffered during training camp. He eventually lost the starting job in 2001 and did not play the 2002 season. (reference 5)

McIntosh would spend two additional seasons with the Seahawks prior to his McIntosh never fully recovered from his neck injuries and June 25, 2003 release.(reference 5) He has not played in the NFL since.

References:

1. The NFL player listing of Chris McIntosh in SportsIllustrated.com [[1]]

2. The Hawkstorian: Salary Cap Update, Seahawks.NET Posted Aug 8, 2005 [[2]]

3. Percy Allen,"Seahawks finally sign McIntosh". The Seattle Times, August 26, 2000

4. Mike Sando,"The Bad Old Days." Seahawks Insider, October 29, 2006 [[3]]

5. Clare Farnsworth,"Seahawks release McIntosh" SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER, Saturday, July 26, 2003 [[4]]

16:53, 11 September 2007 (UTC)~ Cv0063

WikiProject class rating[edit]

This article was automatically assessed because at least one WikiProject had rated the article as stub, and the rating on other projects was brought up to Stub class. BetacommandBot (talk) 18:27, 5 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Draft Bust[edit]

I would like to see who someone can "rate him" as one the biggest draft busts in history. Furthermore he can't be considered a bust when he was forced to retire due to injury. --HotOne121 (talk) 23:06, 12 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Mens hockey[edit]

How long will you continue to put up with the most incompetent coach that has ever coached Wisconsin hockey? You fire the football coach who had a more stellar record. You refuse to hire a person who may have given the football team a stellar record without so much as a chance to prove what he could do. I surely hope that the new coach makes big strides in the football program or it is quite possible that you may be looking for new employment. Please find a hockey coachthat can coach a winning program instead of a losing in one suc as you have had since the present one has been at Wisconsin. 166.181.87.87 (talk) 21:13, 4 February 2023 (UTC)[reply]